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Henry county Doe CWD
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<blockquote data-quote="WTM" data-source="post: 5188218" data-attributes="member: 6230"><p>that pretty much aligns with the study findings from 2013 in that the only culling practice that seems to prevent the prevalence rate somewhat is the illinois sharpshooter program and that hunter culling opportunities did very little.</p><p></p><p>although there wasnt a non culled control unit, they could compare wisconsin and illinois between the years wisconsin participated in DNR sharpshooter culling. both states had around a 1% average prevalence rate during those years with wisconsin rising sharply after discontinuing their sharpshooter program to move to a hunter culling program. illinois still has a 1% prevalence rate 13 years later but they do kill and process about 4000 deer per year out of those northern counties.</p><p></p><p>the problem with a population explosion would be a larger prion pool in the environment, hence more infected deer more than likely.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WTM, post: 5188218, member: 6230"] that pretty much aligns with the study findings from 2013 in that the only culling practice that seems to prevent the prevalence rate somewhat is the illinois sharpshooter program and that hunter culling opportunities did very little. although there wasnt a non culled control unit, they could compare wisconsin and illinois between the years wisconsin participated in DNR sharpshooter culling. both states had around a 1% average prevalence rate during those years with wisconsin rising sharply after discontinuing their sharpshooter program to move to a hunter culling program. illinois still has a 1% prevalence rate 13 years later but they do kill and process about 4000 deer per year out of those northern counties. the problem with a population explosion would be a larger prion pool in the environment, hence more infected deer more than likely. [/QUOTE]
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